Don't they call your part of Idaho the "banana belt"?
I think that "Saturn" peaches were developed by Stark Brothers, not far
from where I live. Every so often, I find them at farmers' markets
around here. Yummy!
Cathy
On Friday, April 29, 2005, at 01:14 AM, Judy Browning wrote:

Thanks Jim,
It is indeed edible and root hardy here. I see at least 6 on this 3
foot
tall plant. My brother in law has had a few figs on his tree but never
offered me one. This one is "very good" per the vendor (see link
below), but
this is the first fruit on mine. Their website is still constructinghttp://www.onegreenworld.com/ but the catolog is inspiring.
I'm scheming how I can afford to replace my infested pines with some of
their exotics
(saturn peach, persimmon, evergreen huckleberry, white mulberry) that
will
screen the neighbors without growing into power lines.
Judy B
z6 Idaho, looks like sunny with high clouds today, not much breeze, so
probably 60's or warmer later on.

From: "james singer" <islandjim1@verizon.net>

I'm not familiar with Peter's Honey, but if its an edible fig [Ficus
carica] its cauliflorus--that is, the fruit are borne directly on the
trunks or stems. And, in the case of the fig, the "fruit" are actually
flowers, so no pollination is necessary. Just watch out that the birds
don't get them before you do.
On Apr 28, 2005, at 5:51 PM, Judy Browning wrote:

It survived the mild winter nicely & has a tuft of new leaves at the
top of
each "trunk" (it froze to the ground the previous winter). The other
buds
are turning into roundish little knobs. Several of these look like
they may
become figs. What do I do to encourage this? Do they need to be
pollinated?
If so when?? Any & all wise words welcomed.

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